Afrikaans music in the folk or folk/rock style has been around for ages, producing excellent song writers like the superb Koos du Plessis and Koos Kombuis, reflecting many aspects of life in South Africa. This album carries on in that fine tradition. Spergebied (restricted or no-go area) is an incredibly frank and honest look at Joburg and its people, particularly those living in the south. No-go areas of the human psyche, despair, hope, deterioration, love and violence are confronted with humour, anger, irony and sensitivity using brilliant imagery. Die Geraamtes in Jou Kas takes an evocative look at the township war and the effect it has left on the young conscripts in the Casspirs. Don’t let me give you the impression that this album is all doom and gloom. There is a great balance and serious fun, some great lines and good music that will leave you wondering when the next Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes CD will be coming out.
– Etienne Creux, Pretoria News, 21 August 2002

Firmly in the middle of the new wave of Afrikaans rock bands, BMRO plays driving folk rock – kind of like Koos du Plessis had he ever heard Nirvana. Yes, they’re really from Brixton, and with the bearded Andries Bezuidenhout at the helm and the eclectric Esme Eva Kwaad as occasional sidekick, they’re becoming a live act to be reckoned with. Their debut album is uncomplicated in sound an filled with great songs (good lyrics is one of their hallmarks) about women, drinking, Jo’burg, yuppies, road rage and life in general. ‘Brixton-dae’ is a classic already, with our heroes waiting for ‘beter dae, want vandag was kak.’ ‘Geen Land’ looks beyond SA’s kak and crime to possible saviours, while ‘Dronk Op Jou Eie’ explores the familiar beauty of getting drunk on your own: ‘Ek wil hurk in die gorrel van ‘n bottel/ Ek wil skuil in die stilte tussen teue.’ On the whole, music that will make you feel better the moring after you did something reprehensible.
– Toast Coetzer, SL Magazine, Desember 2002/Januarie 2003

Every now and then (quite often, actually) I get tired of listening to songs about Nashville, Tennessee, New York, New York, Route 66 and the Vietnam war. Loud applause greets Bruce Springsteen everytime he sings about his Jersey Girl and being Born in the USA. But these (and other) songs mean very little to a born and bred South African like myself. Where are the songs written from the South African perspective about life and living in South Africa? Well, actually there are plenty. A few recent English-speaking (or should that be singing and rapping) artists, like Moodphase 5ive and Syd Kitchen, sing about life as it really is in South Africa, but if you really want songs about Jeffreys Bay, driving through the Karoo, Port St Johns, buying drugs in Stellenbosch and picking up girls from the Strand, listen to the Afrikaans rock poets. There are far too many to name here, but one of the newest Afrikaans rock bands to sing about real life in South Africa are the Brixton Moord en Roof Orkes (Brixton Murder and Robbery Band). To quote their website: “Brixton” here does not refer to the Brixton in London, but to a suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa. The name of the band refers to a notorious police unit (now disbanded), that was stationed in the suburb… On their debut album ‘Spergebied’ (Restricted Area) they sing about the dark side of South Africa, based on their own very real experiences. There are songs about living and jolling in Brixton and Melville (Brixton-Dae), the merits of getting drunk on your own (Dronk op jou eie), road rage (err, Road Rage) and a song for those that leave SA for greener pastures (Geen Land). And I love those little soundbites that link the songs: “this is the final call for passengers Barnard, Greef and Bezuidenhout delaying British Airways flight to London…” and “you have no new messages”. ‘Geraamtes in jou kas’ is about the nightmares that are suffered by the soldiers that had to go into the townships to “maintain the peace”. “Jy onthou die vure/ en die wiele van ‘n Casspir/ en die reuk van brandende rubber/ deur die neus van jou gasmasker”. This is not a very cheerful album on the lyrical side, but the music really rocks. So, to mis-quote Syd (Kitchen, not Barrett), this CD is not for sissies, but the brave listener who ventures into this Restricted Area will be rewarded with some very unrestricted Afrikaans Rock.
– Brian Currin, SA Rock Digest, April 2002